TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge.
We are asked to review a district court's assertion of jurisdiction over a matter involving a foreign sovereign, the Republic of Ukraine, and its agencies and instrumentalities (the "Ukrainian defendants"), following an alleged failure of those agencies and instrumentalities to pay for asset recovery work performed by a private entity, Universal Trading & Investment Co., Inc. ("UTICo"). Since we find that the Ukrainian defendants' transactions with UTICo constitute commercial activity exempt from immunity under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act ("FSIA"), 28 U.S.C. § 1604, we affirm the district court's exercise of jurisdiction over UTICo's breach of contract claim.
The following facts are alleged in UTICo's complaint and were accepted as true by the Ukrainian defendants for the purposes of the motion to dismiss. In our review, we accept as true all well-pled facts alleged in the complaint and draw all reasonable inferences in UTICo's favor. Santiago v. Puerto Rico, 655 F.3d 61, 72 (1st Cir.2011).
Plaintiff UTICo is a Massachusetts corporation that engages in international asset recovery operations. Defendants Ukraine, the Ukrainian Prosecutor General's Office ("UPGO"), and the Bureau for Representing Ukrainian Interests in International and Foreign Courts (the "Bureau") are charged in UTICo's complaint with a breach of contract for services UTICo allegedly rendered to them, but which remain uncompensated. This tale of international dimensions begins when UPGO turned to UTICo for assistance to recover assets expatriated from Ukraine by United Energy Systems of Ukraine ("UESU"), its principals (including former Ukrainian Prime Minister Pavlo Lazarenko ("Lazarenko") and Lazarenko's assistant, Petro Kiritchenko ("Kiritchenko")), and its parent company, United Energy International, Ltd.
The service agreements ("Agreements") between UPGO and UTICo at issue in this appeal arose in the context of UTICo's prior work investigating Cube, Ltd. ("Cube"), which was reorganized to become UESU. UESU, through the intervention of Lazarenko, had been awarded a lucrative government contract to handle the import of natural gas for distribution and delivery in Ukraine, and the proceeds collected by UESU for resale of natural gas had been converted through UESU's parent company accounts and then hidden in UESU's principals' secret accounts. In the course of UTICo's independent collection case against Cube/UESU, it uncovered evidence of Lazarenko's involvement in the control of UESU, and it had contacted UPGO and other Ukrainian agencies to report the uncovered fraudulent relationship. Ukraine's account agencies subsequently estimated that the total proceeds misappropriated from Ukraine by UESU amounted to over $2 billion. It was based on this and other of UTICo's discoveries that UPGO, in 1998, "expressed interest in contracting UTICo for continued investigation of the whereabouts of UESU-related assets and for the freezing of those assets, particularly those appropriated by Lazarenko, anywhere in the world that they might be found." Prior to its outreach to UTICo, the complaint alleges, UPGO had little success in its efforts to collect evidence in foreign jurisdictions in its investigations and prosecutions of Ukrainian nationals, most importantly in its attempts at asset recovery.
UTICo and UPGO reached their first agreement on May 15, 1998, when the Ukrainian Deputy Prosecutor General, Nikolai Obikhod, traveled to New York and discussed the terms of UTICo's provision of its services with UTICo's representatives ("May Agreement"). That agreement stated as follows:
The Agreement was addressed to the President of UTICo, Y.A. Lambert, and bore the UPGO letterhead, including the
According to the complaint, the May Agreement was executed as the "first framework agreement" that was followed by 14 additional contractual instruments between UTICo and UPGO. The most prominent of these instruments is an agreement dated October 2, 1998, in which the newly confirmed Prosecutor General, Mikhailo Potebenko, confirmed the May Agreement ("October Agreement"). That Agreement, also addressed to Y.A. Lambert as President of UTICo, states:
The October Agreement letter also bore the UPGO letterhead, including the Coat of Arms of Ukraine, and the signature of the new Prosecutor General. It was delivered to UTICo by Ukrainian officials during the Ukrainian Prime Minister's trip to Washington, D.C.
Other instruments included Powers of Attorney ("POAs") granted by UPGO to UTICo and/or attorneys selected by UTICo to pursue a series of investigations and actions on its behalf in multiple jurisdictions outside of Ukraine. Specifically, they granted UTICo and its selected attorneys authority to investigate and bring legal actions to reveal and secure the freezing of assets in a variety of jurisdictions, including, inter alia, the United States, the British Virgin Islands, the Bahamas, Panama, and Barbados. UTICo used these POAs to accomplish its asset recovery work on behalf of Ukraine.
UTICo claims that it was instrumental in freezing hundreds of millions of dollars for Ukraine through uncovering fraud engaged in by the principals of UESU and providing evidence vital to the prosecution of Lazarenko, Kiritchenko, and others. For example, it states in the complaint that it provided the evidence to UPGO that allowed UPGO to freeze $144 million of assets in the Balford Trust and an additional unknown amount of assets in the BL Trust maintained by Credit Suisse AG Bank in Guernsey, the Channel Islands, in 1998. It also allegedly provided evidence to UPGO allowing UPGO to freeze over $100 million of assets held in Eurofed Bank in Antigua, Lithuania, and Switzerland in 1999 and 2000. Further, UTICO claims it collected evidence in the Bahamas, Panama, Cyprus, Nauru, the Isle of Man, Jersey, St. Kitts, and the Cayman Islands, which UPGO then used to prosecute claims for stolen assets in excess of $1 billion in Ukraine.
On November 26, 2010, UTICo filed its complaint in the instant action. The Ukrainian defendants accepted UTICo's facts as true when they filed a motion to dismiss the complaint on grounds, inter alia, that they were entitled to immunity under the FSIA.
The district court denied defendants' motion to dismiss in part, allowing UTICo's breach of contract claim pertaining to the 1998 Agreements to go forward on grounds that jurisdiction could be asserted over that claim under the commercial activity exception to the FSIA. See Universal Trading & Inv. Co. v. Bureau for
Id. at 314-16 (emphasis in original). The Ukrainian defendants timely appealed the court's immunity determination, and on April 4, 2013, the district court stayed proceedings pending this appeal. See Ungar v. Palestine Liberation Org., 402 F.3d 274, 293 (1st Cir.2005) (appeal on grounds of foreign sovereign immunity permissible under collateral order doctrine).
The Ukrainian defendants make three arguments on appeal, all relating to the applicability of the commercial activity exception to their sovereign immunity. First, they contend that "the commercial act identified by the District Court in finding jurisdiction — UPGO's alleged entering into a contract with UTICo — did not occur," and thus, there was no particular transaction or act that could come within the definition of "commercial activity" under § 1603(d) of the FSIA. Second, they challenge the district court's determination that the underlying conduct constituted commercial activity rather than sovereign activity, claiming that the court "conducted its jurisdictional analysis as though UTICo provided run-of-the-mill asset recovery services." Instead, the Ukrainian defendants characterize the underlying contracted-for activity as assistance with a criminal investigation and asset forfeiture, and insist that when a sovereign contracts with someone to perform such "a uniquely governmental, non-commercial, service," the activity may not come within the commercial activity exception. Finally, the Ukrainian defendants contend that UTICo's claim lacks the nexus to the United States required to establish jurisdiction under the commercial activity exception. We address each issue in turn.
The existence vel non of subject matter jurisdiction under the FSIA is a question of law reviewed de novo. Rodríguez v. Republic of Costa Rica, 297 F.3d 1, 5 (1st Cir.2002). Since the Ukrainian defendants'
The FSIA "provides the sole basis for obtaining jurisdiction over a foreign state in federal court." Argentine Republic v. Amerada Hess Shipping Co., 488 U.S. 428, 439, 109 S.Ct. 683, 102 L.Ed.2d 818 (1989). It establishes a presumption of foreign sovereign immunity from the jurisdiction of the courts of the United States unless one of its enumerated exceptions to immunity applies. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1604, 1605, 1605A; Verlinden B.V. v. Cent. Bank of Nigeria, 461 U.S. 480, 488, 103 S.Ct. 1962, 76 L.Ed.2d 81 (1983). Unless such an exception applies, courts in the United States lack both subject matter and personal jurisdiction over a suit against a foreign sovereign. 28 U.S.C. § 1330; Verlinden, 461 U.S. at 485 n. 5, 103 S.Ct. 1962.
Under the "commercial activity exception" to immunity, a foreign sovereign is not immune from jurisdiction where
28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(2).
Section 1603(d) of the FSIA defines "commercial activity" as "either a regular course of commercial conduct or a particular commercial transaction or act. The commercial character of the activity shall be determined by reference to the nature of the course of conduct or particular transaction or act, rather than by reference to its purpose." The Supreme Court has noted that this definition "leaves the critical term `commercial' largely undefined," and instead "simply establishes that the commercial nature of an activity does not depend upon whether it is a single act or a regular course of conduct; and the second sentence merely specifies what element of the conduct defines commerciality (i.e., nature rather than purpose), but still without saying what `commercial' means." Republic of Argentina v. Weltover, Inc., 504 U.S. 607, 612, 112 S.Ct. 2160, 119 L.Ed.2d 394 (1992). Nevertheless, the Court did state that,
Id. at 614, 112 S.Ct. 2160 (citations omitted). The Court offered an example to highlight the distinction between commercial and sovereign activity:
Id. at 614-15, 112 S.Ct. 2160.
Further, the FSIA requires us to focus our commercial activity inquiry on the activities
The First Circuit has not directly addressed the burdens of the parties with respect to an FSIA action. However, since the parties do not challenge the district court's adoption of the Second Circuit's burden-shifting framework, we adopt that framework here for the purposes of this case. See Universal I, 898 F.Supp.2d at 309 (collecting cases showing that the Second Circuit framework is consistent with the burden-shifting framework in the Third, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh and D.C. Circuits). For our purposes, then, having accepted that defendants fit within the definition of "foreign sovereign," the burden of production is on UTICo to offer evidence showing that, under one of the listed exceptions, immunity should not be granted to the Ukrainian defendants. See Virtual Countries, Inc. v. Republic of S. Afr., 300 F.3d 230, 241 (2d Cir.2002). The ultimate burden of persuasion, however, rests with the foreign sovereign to show that none of the pertinent exceptions apply. Id. "Determining whether this burden has been met involves a `review [of] the allegations in the complaint, the undisputed facts, if any, placed before [the court] by the parties, and — if the plaintiff comes forward with sufficient evidence to carry its burden of production on this issue — [resolution of] disputed issues of fact.'" Id. (quoting Robinson v. Gov't of Malaysia, 269 F.3d 133, 141 (2d Cir.2001)). Where the party asserting immunity does not contest the alleged jurisdictional facts, "but rather, challenges their legal adequacy, we review de novo the complaint's jurisdictional allegations to determine whether they were sufficient to eliminate the appellants' presumptive immunity." Butler v. Sukhoi Co., 579 F.3d 1307, 1313 (11th Cir.2009).
We first consider whether UTICo met its burden of production in showing that a particular commercial transaction or act occurred. See Saudi Arabia v. Nelson, 507 U.S. 349, 356, 113 S.Ct. 1471, 123 L.Ed.2d 47 (1993) ("We begin our analysis by identifying the particular conduct on which the [plaintiff's] action is `based' for the purposes of the Act."). As we have noted in prior cases, "[t]he important question is whether [a sovereign] in fact contracted with the [plaintiff]." See Rodríguez, 297 F.3d at 6. In this circumstance, we examine whether the complaint sufficiently alleges UPGO's entry into contracts and then breach — the commercial activity UPGO's action is "based upon" — even occurred. The Ukrainian defendants carry the ultimate burden of persuasion that no exceptions to FSIA immunity apply. Virtual Countries, 300 F.3d at 241.
The Ukrainian defendants make three arguments challenging the existence of any contract on appeal. First, they claim that the POAs at issue did not empower UTICo, but only non-party lawyers, "presented to [UPGO] by UTICo."
We review de novo the district court's determination that a unilateral contract was formed. Mass. Eye & Ear Infirmary v. QLT Phototherapeutics, Inc., 412 F.3d 215, 229 (1st Cir.2005). UTICo's proffered evidence of its contractual agreements with UPGO consists of the May and October Agreements as well as accompanying and subsequently issued POAs. Aside from the terms of the Agreements themselves, which reference UTICo's assent to agreed-upon terms,
Under Massachusetts law,
Northampton Inst. for Sav. v. Putnam, 313 Mass. 1, 7, 45 N.E.2d 936 (1943).
We first examine what would constitute acceptance based on the terms of UPGO's offer. The terms of the October Agreement, which confirmed the May Agreement, do not appear to place a clear obligation on UTICo to "return" assets to
As for evidence proffered to demonstrate UTICo's acceptance through performance, UTICo first points to a September 15, 2003 letter from the Prosecutor General of Ukraine to the President of Ukraine, which demonstrates UPGO's recognition that UTICo had accomplished performance at least as to assets located and blocked in the banks of Guernsey, Antigua, and other countries. Further, as referenced supra, UTICo submitted a letter from Deputy Prosecutor Kudriavtsev to the President of Ukraine, filed with the Ukrainian municipal court, admitting the existence of a "commission agreement" by virtue of which:
Therefore, proffered evidence by UTICo indicates that a representative of UPGO acknowledged UTICo's full performance under the Agreements and POAs. Together with the other evidence offered, we can conclude for the purposes of our review on a motion to dismiss that sufficient facts have been pled indicating that a unilateral contract was formed.
We next turn to the question of whether the underlying activity at issue in this case may be properly deemed "commercial" as opposed to "sovereign" or "governmental." In doing so, we are required to focus not on the purpose of the activity, but rather on the nature of the course of conduct or particular transaction or act. See 28 U.S.C. § 1603(d); Weltover, 504 U.S. at 612, 112 S.Ct. 2160. The underlying conduct at issue here can be characterized as UPGO's alleged contracting for UTICo's services and UPGO's alleged breach thereof. Those Agreements, along with the POAs that followed them, indicate that the purpose of contracting for UTICO's asset recovery services is to "reveal,... establish the presence, and ... secure the freezing [of assets] ... as well as to accomplish the due measures for subsequent restitution and/or repatriation of illegally created assets to Ukraine." The nature of UTICo's contracted-for services, as listed in the Agreements and POAs, included, inter alia, exchanging information and assistance, "conducting the investigation
The allegations in the complaint indicate that UTICo's performance under the Agreements, taken on behalf of UPGO, were indistinguishable from ordinary asset recovery services. UTICo's complaint states that it: met with various government officials regarding the fraud allegations against Lazarenko and Kiritchenko; secured discovery orders and obtained evidence about assets; applied for protective orders freezing assets; and submitted evidence it gathered to UPGO, which entity was then responsible for requesting foreign government issuance of subpoenas. These activities are actions that any asset recovery agent would perform while entrusted with a power of attorney, whether from a sovereign or a private party. Even if the final goal or purpose of the information and assistance was uniquely governmental — prosecuting criminal conduct and repatriating stolen assets into a sovereign treasury — the FSIA is clear that courts are not to determine the commercial character of an activity "by reference to its purpose." 28 U.S.C. § 1603(d).
Case law supports our construal of the underlying activity as commercial. In Weltover, the Supreme Court held that the Republic of Argentina was not entitled to immunity against a breach of contract claim brought by two corporations and a bank when Argentina unilaterally rescheduled the maturity dates on bonds issued to them. 504 U.S. 607, 112 S.Ct. 2160. The Court reasoned that the issuance of bonds was a "commercial activity" because bonds were in almost all respects garden-variety debt instruments, and it was irrelevant why Argentina participated in the bond market as a private actor. Id. at 615-17, 112 S.Ct. 2160.
Most relevant for our discussion here is the Court's elaboration of the distinction between the "nature" and "purpose" of commercial activity. On appeal, Argentina insisted that, even though a court is barred from considering an activity's purpose, it must nonetheless fully consider the context of a transaction in order to determine whether or not it is "commercial." Id. at 615, 112 S.Ct. 2160. The Court rejected that argument, stating that, "[h]owever difficult it may be in some cases to separate `purpose' (i.e., the reason why the foreign state engages in the activity) from `nature' (i.e., the outward form of the conduct that the foreign state performs or agrees to perform), the statute unmistakably commands that to be done." Id. at 618, 112 S.Ct. 2160 (citations omitted). The nature of those activities are firmly defined as those powers not peculiar to sovereigns, but rather as "powers that can also be exercised by private citizens." Alfred Dunhill of London, Inc. v. Republic of Cuba, 425 U.S. 682, 704, 96 S.Ct. 1854, 48 L.Ed.2d 301 (1976) (emphasis added). Ordinary asset recovery services of the type described in UTICo's complaint are exactly the sort for which private citizens contract.
Further, the services for which the Ukrainian defendants contracted did not require UTICo to perform any governmental functions, they merely obligated UTICo to assist the Ukrainian defendants in later permitting those defendants to carry out governmental functions themselves. Two Eleventh Circuit decisions are illuminating in this regard. In Honduras Aircraft Registry, Ltd. v. Government of Honduras, 129 F.3d 543 (11th Cir.1997), the Government of Honduras contracted with two plaintiff companies to assist it in upgrading and establishing a modern civil aeronautics program. Under the contract, the plaintiff companies were given "the right to inspect commercial aircraft for
In a case even closer to the facts here, Guevara v. Republic of Perú, 468 F.3d 1289 (11th Cir.2006), the Eleventh Circuit considered whether the Republic of Perú's offer of a reward in return for information enabling it to locate and capture the fugitive former head of Perú's National Intelligence System fell within the commercial activity exception to sovereign immunity. In that case, Perú, desperate for leads after an international manhunt went stale, issued an emergency decree establishing a $5 million reward for accurate information enabling the authorities to locate and capture Vladimiro Lenin Montesinos Torres. Id. at 1293. Plaintiff Guevara had assisted Montesinos in Venezuela by providing him with a safe-house and a security detail; but he betrayed Montesinos' whereabouts to FBI agents in exchange for, he believed, immunity from federal prosecution and the high Peruvian monetary reward. Id. When Perú refused to pay, Guevara filed a lawsuit in Florida contending that Perú was not immune under the commercial activity exception. Id. at 1294. The district court dismissed his complaint on immunity grounds, and the Eleventh Circuit reversed, holding that the "underlying activity at issue — the exchange of money for information — is `commercial in nature and of the type negotiable among private parties.'" Id. at 1299 (citing Honduras Aircraft Registry, 129 F.3d at 547). Specifically, the court found central the fact that
Id. (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The court sharply distinguished the roles of the sovereign from that of the private party with whom it contracted by separating out the police powers and governmental functions retained by the former in the transaction:
Id. at 1300. The court also rejected Perú's argument that Guevara was a mere "subrogee" or agent of the sovereign's authority performing a sovereign function, offering the following analogy: "If a bail bondsman offered a reward for information enabling the location and capture of a fugitive who had skipped out on a bond, he could not successfully defend a lawsuit seeking to collect on the reward by asserting sovereign immunity." Id. at 1301. The court went on to conclude, "[i]f an agent acting for the sovereign could not successfully claim sovereign immunity, the sovereign could not either." Id.
We find this reasoning most closely applicable to the facts alleged here. According to the complaint, the Ukrainian defendants had tried on their own to obtain the converted assets absconded from the country at the hands of Lazarenko, Kiritchenko and others, and had failed in their own attempts. Defendants then entered into the marketplace to obtain information and assistance in recovering those assets, benefitting from the expertise and resources of professional asset recovery services like those UTICo brought to bear, and decided to contract with UTICo to accomplish those tasks in exchange for a commissioned amount. As in Honduras Aircraft Registry, the Ukrainian defendants "could have explored the possibility of hiring plaintiffs and plaintiffs' personnel as government employees," but instead, they "exercised their business judgment and contracted in the marketplace with non-government companies to do and supply what [they] needed." 129 F.3d at 547.
Further, UTICo was allegedly hired to provide the means and the technical work to assist in asset return and evidence gathering so that Ukraine itself could either return any assets found by UTICo into its treasury or prosecute the UESU principals, should it choose to do so. Just as was the case in Guevara, the Agreements here do not impinge on Ukraine's sovereignty because they do not force Ukraine's hand either way regarding the exercise of its police power over Lazarenko and Kiritchenko, nor do they require it to reappropriate any assets into the Ukrainian treasury that defendants decide not to reappropriate.
It is for these reasons that this case is distinguishable from the cases cited by the Ukrainian defendants. First, it is distinguishable from dicta in In re Estate of Ferdinand Marcos Human Rights Litigation, 94 F.3d 539 (9th Cir.1997), because, in that case, the underlying activity at issue was not the contracting for public asset recovery by a sovereign. Rather, the underlying activity involved the direct pursuit by a governmental agency of the Republic of the Philippines, under a statutory mandate, to recover property allegedly converted by the dictator Ferdinand Marcos, his wife, Imelda Marcos, and their associates, after the couple fled to Hawaii. Id. at 542, 546. In that pursuit, the agency utilized its full police power in its attempts to directly reappropriate the assets into the Republic's treasury. Id. at 546. Further, according to the allegations in the complaint, the assets in this case were not absconded from the Ukrainian treasury, but were rather alleged to have been received as illegal kickbacks from public enterprises in Ukraine. The determination of whether or not those assets in fact belonged within the Ukrainian treasury was one only a sovereign could make, and was a task UTICo was not contracted to
The Ukrainian defendants attempt to liken this case to cases involving military personnel. We have no need to determine whether we will adopt a special "military personnel" rule as this case does not directly raise the issue and is distinguishable. In Butters v. Vance International, Inc., 225 F.3d 462 (4th Cir.2000), the Fourth Circuit held that a private security company was entitled to derivative FSIA immunity from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in a gender discrimination suit. The facts underlying the case were that the plaintiff was allegedly discriminated against when a private company, at the direction of the Saudi government, refused to promote her into a command post. Id. at 464. The court characterized the underlying activity as "a foreign sovereign's decision as to how best to secure the safety of its leaders," which it held to involve a core police power. Id. at 465. Here, however, the contracted-for activity did not involve the direct protection of foreign dignitaries, nor are there any alleged facts alleging that the private party — UTICo — had been given by contract the types of police powers at issue in Butters: according to the complaint's allegations, UTICo personnel were not deputized, had no powers of arrest, were not armed as traditional security would be, and are not alleged to have had any law enforcement authority. In fact, the allegations indicate that Ukraine had to step in at various points to perform functions only it could perform that the contractual agreement did not contemplate (for example, using evidence submitted to it by UTICo to request from the Bailiff (governor) of Guernsey the issuance of a subpoena to Credit Suisse for document production in relation to the asset recovery; using evidence obtained by UTICo to seek the detention of Lazarenko in Switzerland; using evidence obtained by UTICo to file an application to the Ukrainian parliament to strip Lazarenko of parliamentary immunity and for his arrest, etc.).
This case is likewise distinguishable from UNC Lear Services, Inc. v. Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, 581 F.3d 210 (5th Cir. 2009), where Saudi Arabia was held to be immune from an action alleging breach of a service contract with a private company to provide training and support services to the Royal Saudi Air Force ("RSAF"). There, the private employees performed their work in Saudi Arabia and were found to be so integrated with the RSAF as to be considered "military personnel." Id. at 216. The legislative history of the FSIA is clear that employment contracts with military personnel are not commercial in nature,
It is for the same reasons that this case is also distinguishable from other government personnel cases cited by the Ukrainian defendants, including Kato v. Ishihara, 360 F.3d 106 (2d Cir.2004) and the recent unpublished decision by the Ninth Circuit, Eringer v. Principality of Monaco, No. 11-56570, ___ Fed.Appx. ___, 2013 WL 3634470 (9th Cir. July 10, 2013). In Kato, a civil service employee for the Tokyo Metropolitan Government sued her employer for sexual harassment and retaliation in violation of Title VII, attempting to assert a commercial activity exception on the basis that her employment activities involved the commercial promotion of Japanese companies in the United States. 360 F.3d at 109. The court held that the underlying activity at issue was not commercial in nature because it consisted in providing "general business development assistance, including product promotion, to business enterprises of [a] country seeking to engage in commerce in the United States." Id. at 114. Here, for the same reasons stated above, based on the complaint's allegations, UTICo can neither be characterized as a government employee nor was it contracted to provide services akin to those provided by the plaintiff in Kato. Specifically, the Ukrainian defendants, in contracting with UTICo, were allegedly not engaged in the process of regulating and promoting commercial activity in a foreign country in relation to itself, but were rather entering into the marketplace in the United States to engage in commerce, contracting for specific services to assist in fields such as criminal prosecution and public asset reappropriation that they retained the ultimate power to regulate.
In Eringer, the plaintiff was the former Director of Monaco Intelligence Services and had assignments that only a government employee could perform — "liaising with other intelligence agencies, investigating potential Government appointments, investigating suspicions of corruption and other illegal activity in Monaco, and protecting [Prince Albert II] from improper foreign influence." No. 11-56570, ___ Fed.Appx. at ___, 2013 WL 3634470, at *1. Eringer's facts, similar to those of Butters and Kato, are distinguishable from those alleged here for the same reasons those two cases are: UTICo employees can neither be characterized as government nor military personnel, and the underlying activity did not involve conduct that only a sovereign could perform. Nothing in the terms of the Agreements, the POAs or the alleged facts of UTICo's performance indicate that UTICo was either tasked with, had been given the authority, or had the capacity to perform the kinds of police-power activity that a director of an intelligence program working inside a government could perform, nor did Ukraine allow it to do so.
UTICo having met its burden of production on this score, we now turn to whether the Ukrainian defendants have made assertions at this stage to meet their burden, by a preponderance of the evidence, to show that UTICo's claims do not fall within the commercial activity exception. We find that they have not. The Ukrainian defendants make an assertion that no assets have been in fact "returned" to Ukraine. We have found that the actual return of assets was not clearly stated one of UTICo's performance obligations on the face of the October Agreement. The Ukrainian defendants have concentrated
We now turn to the Ukrainian defendants' final argument: that UTICo's claim on its pleadings lacks the nexus to the United States required to establish jurisdiction under the commercial activity exception. For a court to exercise jurisdiction over a foreign sovereign under the commercial activity exception, the FSIA requires that some form of nexus be established between the sovereign's activity and the United States. As stated above, a nexus between a defendant's commercial activity and the United States may be shown under one of three circumstances under the statute: (1) the activity was "carried on in the United States"; (2) the activity performed in the United States is "in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere"; or (3) the activity occurred "outside the territory of the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere and that act causes a direct effect in the United States." 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(2). The Act further defines "commercial activity carried on in the United States by a foreign state" as meaning "commercial activity carried on by such state and having substantial contact with the United States." Id. § 1603(e).
The Ukrainian defendants contend that the district court erred in not analyzing whether the pleadings in UTICo's surviving breach of contract claim pled a sufficient nexus with the United States to establish jurisdiction. The district court in fact did not consider the nexus requirement as mandated by the statute. In doing so here, we conclude that plaintiff alleges sufficient facts to support the nexus requirement for jurisdiction.
Having characterized the commercial activity at issue as the Ukrainian defendants' contracting for information and assistance in exchange for a commission, we begin by looking at the facts alleged pertaining to the Agreements and the POAs. The negotiations with UTICo's management and counsel pertaining to the Agreements are alleged to have occurred in the United States, all of the contractual instruments were directed to U.S. addresses in Massachusetts, and those instruments were allegedly delivered in either Massachusetts or Washington, D.C., to representatives of a corporation organized under the laws of Massachusetts with its principal place of business in Massachusetts.
UPGO does not contest that the Agreements were delivered in the United States. However, it does point out in its briefing that "UTICo does not allege that either of the two letters on which [the breach of contract claim] is based were actually executed in the United States." Even if the Agreements were executed outside the United States, it is not dispositive as the Agreements were actually unilateral contracts. As such, we may look to where the unilateral contract was offered since it was the offer that in fact established a nexus or link between the Ukrainian defendants in this case and UTICo, and it was through that offer that the foreign sovereign engaged in commerce and officially entered the marketplace in the United States. Since the Ukrainian defendants do not dispute that both Agreements were delivered to UTICo within the United States, we conclude that UTICo alleged sufficient facts that the commercial activity at issue was "carried on in the United States." See also Guevara v. Republic of Perú ("Guevara
We also note UTICo's submission to the district court of a declaration from its chairman, W. Scott Thompson, stating that the May Agreement was executed "[a]fter several months of negotiations including in New York in April of 1998." See Terenkian v. Republic of Iraq, 694 F.3d 1122, 1137 (9th Cir.2012) (finding the nexus requirement satisfied where "substantial prior contractual negotiations ... occurred within the United States."). The declaration further stated that "more than 90% of work" by UTICo in "implementing the 1998 Agreements" was "performed in Massachusetts." See Zedan v. Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, 849 F.2d 1511, 1513 (D.C.Cir.1988) (citing H.R.Rep. No. 1487, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 17 (1976), as stating that the nexus requirement may be met in "cases based on commercial transactions performed in whole or in part in the United States.").
Even if we were to find that the Ukrainian defendants' alleged commercial activity was not "carried on in the United States," sufficient facts were alleged to establish a nexus based on their activity "outside the territory of the United States in connection with a commercial activity... [that] causes a direct effect in the United States." 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(2). Thompson's declaration indicates that the Bureau would have performed its obligations under the Agreements in Massachusetts: "UTICo's accounts payable concerning the Bureau (as well as any other accounts payable) have been in Massachusetts," so "[i]f the Bureau paid UTICo, the funds would have been received on its accounts in Massachusetts." In Weltover, the Supreme Court discussed this third type of nexus as not requiring "substantiality" or "foreseeability" of effects in the United States, defining the effect required instead as "`direct' if it follows `as an immediate consequence of the defendant's... activity.'" 504 U.S. at 618, 112 S.Ct. 2160 (quoting Weltover, Inc. v. Republic of Argentina, 941 F.2d 145, 152 (2d Cir. 1991)). The Court also noted that the sovereign defendants
Id. at 619, 112 S.Ct. 2160.
In addition, UTICo, as an American company, allegedly suffered significant financial harm when the Ukrainian defendants refused to remit the commission due under the Agreements, which creates a sufficient direct effect to meet the requirements of the exception. See, e.g., Byrd v. Corporación Forestal y Industrial de Olancho S.A., 182 F.3d 380, 390-91 (5th Cir.1999) (holding that an American company suffering financial harm after a Honduran
We conclude that the district court did not err when it denied the Ukrainian defendants' motion to dismiss UTICo's breach of contract claim under the commercial activity exception to foreign sovereign immunity. Accordingly, the decision of the district court is affirmed.